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On 28/04/2009, at 1:09 PM, David Manura wrote:
On Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at 4:15 PM, Geoff Leyland wrote:The default package.path contains './?.lua', but not './?/init.lua'.Obviously, it's easy to add, so there's no problem, but I often find myselfadding it. Any reason it's not there by default?Perhaps we should instead ask why init.lua it not eliminated entirely. It is not necessary[1], and I think it complicates things[2]. Module authors need to decide which form to use, and it's near certain that different module authors will choose different conventions. Module users or Lua distributions, when adding a directory to the Lua search path, may need to add both forms in general, though omitting the latter might usually work or might appear to initially work. It also opens the ambiguity where ".../a/init.lua" could represent the module "a" or a module actually named "a.init". Finally, it makes module search errors longer for the end-user:
While we're discussing packages, what's the logic behind the difference between what's returned by require and what's put in _G?
mod.lua: module(...) a = 1 return 3 > print(require("mod")) 2 > print(type(mod)) tableThis may seem irrelevant, but I often put a single class or function into a file:
obj.lua: local setmetable = setmetatable module(...) obj = {} function obj:new() self.__index = self return setmetatable({}, self) end and create a new obj I have to go: > require("obj") > o = obj.obj:new() which is a bit awkward.An alternative is to put a "return obj" at the end of obj.lua, and then I need to go
> local obj = require("obj") > o = obj:new() Where I have to add the "local obj =" One workaround is: obj.lua: local setmetable = setmetatable module(...) function new(self) self.__index = self return setmetatable({}, self) end > require("obj") > o = obj:new()But I kind of get the feeling I'm not Doing The Right Thing in all these cases. I don't have any solution to this, or any strong opinions, just wondering if anyone has a better idea.
Cheers, Geoff